Literature DB >> 26439058

(Positive) power to the child: The role of children's willing stance toward parents in developmental cascades from toddler age to early preadolescence.

Grazyna Kochanska1, Sanghag Kim2, Lea J Boldt1.   

Abstract

In a change from the once-dominant view of children as passive in the parent-led process of socialization, children are now seen as active agents who can considerably influence that process. However, these newer perspectives typically focus on the child's antagonistic influence, due either to a difficult temperament or aversive, resistant, negative behaviors that elicit adversarial responses from the parent and lead to future coercive cascades in the relationship. Children's capacity to act as receptive, willing, even enthusiastic, active socialization agents is largely overlooked. Informed by attachment theory and other relational perspectives, we depict children as able to adopt an active willing stance and to exert robust positive influence in the mutually cooperative socialization enterprise. A longitudinal study of 100 community families (mothers, fathers, and children) demonstrates that willing stance (a) is a latent construct, observable in diverse parent-child contexts, parallel at 38, 52, and 67 months and longitudinally stable; (b) originates within an early secure parent-child relationship at 25 months; and (c) promotes a positive future cascade toward adaptive outcomes at age 10. The outcomes include the parent's observed and child-reported positive, responsive behavior, as well as child-reported internal obligation to obey the parent and parent-reported low level of child behavior problems. The construct of willing stance has implications for basic research in typical socialization and in developmental psychopathology as well as for prevention and intervention.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26439058      PMCID: PMC4610148          DOI: 10.1017/S0954579415000644

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychopathol        ISSN: 0954-5794


  42 in total

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2.  Children's attachment to both parents from toddler age to middle childhood: links to adaptive and maladaptive outcomes.

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Review 4.  Developmental theories of parental contributors to antisocial behavior.

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Authors:  M S Clark
Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol       Date:  1984-09

6.  Parenting moderates a genetic vulnerability factor in longitudinal increases in youths' substance use.

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Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  2009-02

7.  Punishment insensitivity and parenting: temperament and learning as interacting risks for antisocial behavior.

Authors:  Mark R Dadds; Karen Salmon
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8.  A developmental model of maternal and child contributions to disruptive conduct: the first six years.

Authors:  Grazyna Kochanska; Robin A Barry; Nazan Aksan; Lea J Boldt
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2008-08-04       Impact factor: 8.982

9.  Novel insights into longstanding theories of bidirectional parent-child influences: introduction to the special section.

Authors:  Dustin A Pardini
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2008-04-25

10.  Maternal power assertion in discipline and moral discourse contexts: commonalities, differences, and implications for children's moral conduct and cognition.

Authors:  Grazyna Kochanska; Nazan Aksan; Kate E Nichols
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  4 in total

1.  A Secure Base from which to Cooperate: Security, Child and Parent Willing Stance, and Adaptive and Maladaptive Outcomes in two Longitudinal Studies.

Authors:  Kathryn C Goffin; Lea J Boldt; Grazyna Kochanska
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  2018-07

2.  Infant Attachment Moderates Paths From Early Negativity to Preadolescent Outcomes for Children and Parents.

Authors:  Lea J Boldt; Grazyna Kochanska; Katherine Jonas
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2016-08-29

3.  Attachment in middle childhood: predictors, correlates, and implications for adaptation.

Authors:  Lea J Boldt; Grazyna Kochanska; Rebecca Grekin; Rebecca L Brock
Journal:  Attach Hum Dev       Date:  2015-12-16

4.  Children's emerging receptive, positive orientation toward their parents in the network of early attachment relationships.

Authors:  Danming An; Grazyna Kochanska; Nicole Yeager; Neevetha Sivagurunathan; Rochelle Praska; Robin Campbell; Sung Yi Shin
Journal:  Attach Hum Dev       Date:  2021-04-06
  4 in total

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